TY - JOUR
T1 - There and back again
T2 - Revisiting the on-time effect
AU - Zivony, Alon
AU - Lamy, Dominique
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2015/8/1
Y1 - 2015/8/1
N2 - In apparent motion, static stimuli presented successively in shifted locations produce a subjective percept of continuous motion. Reducing stimulus exposure (or on-time) was shown to consistently increase the perceived velocity of apparent motion (Vision Research 29 (1989), 335-347), yet surprisingly little investigation has followed up on the discovery of this illusion. In five experiments, we delineate the boundary conditions of the on-time illusion in order to clarify its underlying mechanisms. Subjects viewed multi-item apparent-motion displays, in which at some point, on-time duration either increased or decreased. Objective velocity remained unchanged, yet participants had to judge whether they perceived the motion to become slower or faster. We observed the on-time illusion during both fast and slow apparent motion. The effect was not modulated by stimulus luminance, thus precluding an energy-summation account of the illusion. It generalized from speed perception to time perception in a temporal bisection task. The illusion was specific to apparent motion, as it did not occur with veridical motion. Finally, the illusion persisted when on-time and off-time were not confounded, that is, when off-time remained constant. These findings are discussed in the framework of current models of motion perception.
AB - In apparent motion, static stimuli presented successively in shifted locations produce a subjective percept of continuous motion. Reducing stimulus exposure (or on-time) was shown to consistently increase the perceived velocity of apparent motion (Vision Research 29 (1989), 335-347), yet surprisingly little investigation has followed up on the discovery of this illusion. In five experiments, we delineate the boundary conditions of the on-time illusion in order to clarify its underlying mechanisms. Subjects viewed multi-item apparent-motion displays, in which at some point, on-time duration either increased or decreased. Objective velocity remained unchanged, yet participants had to judge whether they perceived the motion to become slower or faster. We observed the on-time illusion during both fast and slow apparent motion. The effect was not modulated by stimulus luminance, thus precluding an energy-summation account of the illusion. It generalized from speed perception to time perception in a temporal bisection task. The illusion was specific to apparent motion, as it did not occur with veridical motion. Finally, the illusion persisted when on-time and off-time were not confounded, that is, when off-time remained constant. These findings are discussed in the framework of current models of motion perception.
KW - Apparent motion
KW - Motion perception
KW - Velocity perception
KW - Visual illusion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84936074643&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.visres.2015.04.020
DO - 10.1016/j.visres.2015.04.020
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AN - SCOPUS:84936074643
SN - 0042-6989
VL - 113
SP - 11
EP - 21
JO - Vision Research
JF - Vision Research
IS - PA
ER -